
If “shed some pounds” is on your resolution list for next year, you’re certainly not the only one. But are you doing all you can to achieve your goals, or are you inadvertently sabotaging them? Take this recent finding, for instance: A study from Cornell University researchers showed that going more than a week without stepping on the scale led to dieters gainingweight, while more frequent weigh-ins were associated with losing weight.
“Often people think they’re doing the right thing (i.e. not weighing themselves daily) but they may actually be making a mistake that prevents weight loss,” study author Brian Wansink, PhD, director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab and author of “Slim By Design: Mindless Eating Solutions for Everyday Life,” tells Yahoo Health.
Are you making other weight-loss mistakes without even realizing it? We asked the experts to share some of the most common diet trip-ups — and how to avoid them.
Mistake No. 1: Thinking Fat-Free = Automatically Healthy
Foods touting their fat-free status may be free of, well, fat, but that doesn’t make them good for your weight-loss efforts. “Many fat-free foods contain lots of sugar to make up for the taste of the missing fat, so they can be high in calories,” Lisa R. Young, PhD, RD, adjunct professor of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University and author of “The Portion Teller: Smartsize Your Way to Permanent Weight Loss,” tells Yahoo Health.Plus, these foods may not satisfy your hunger — so you tend to eat more of them. A better bet? Stick to a small portion of the real thing (with fat) and savor every bite.
Mistake No. 2: Using Artificial Sweeteners
These substances — including stevia, saccharin, sugar alcohols, aspartame, and the like — may seem like a good weight-loss tool because they tend to be lower in calories than sugar — or free of them completely. “But they are designed to be excessively sweet — up to hundreds of times sweeter than table sugar,” Julieanna Hever, M.S., R.D., C.P.T, author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Plant-Based Nutrition and host of the Z Living TV Network wellness talk show series “What Would Julieanna Do?,” explains to Yahoo Health. “This makes your taste buds require a heightened level of sweetness to fulfill their cravings and perpetuates a sugar addiction.” Remedy this mistake by switching to whole food sweeteners such as date paste and pure maple syrup.
Mistake No. 3: Setting Unrealistic Goals
One of the quintessential New Year’s resolutions is to swear off sweets or banish bread. But in reality, it’s hard to stick to such black-and-white rules. “When you set unrealistic goals and don’t achieve them, you end up putting on extra pounds on top of the ones you wanted to lose in the first place,” personal trainer Mary Ann Browning, president of Browning’s Fitness, explains to Yahoo Health. Avoid this by setting goals around your clothes — not the number on the scale. Or, break big goals into smaller chunks. For example: Instead of saying you’ll never eat dessert again, skip sweets during the week and indulge in one or two treats on the weekend. “Eating healthy is a way of life,” Browning says, but it’s not a life sentence!
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